In this lesson you create and configure the PHP project to develop your application, create a list of pages in the application, and define the relations between them. You also develop basic application functionality and test it against the data you entered in the sample database in lesson 1.

The PHP code you write in this lesson performs the following functions:

1. Gets the name of a person that the user types in.

2. Checks whether that person is really in the database. Exits with an error message if the person is not in the database.

3. Displays a table of that person's wishes.

The current document is a part of the Creating a Database-Driven Application in the NetBeans IDE for PHP tutorial.

Creating a PHP Project

Select File > New Project (Ctrl-Shift-N on Windows and Linux, ⌘-Shift-N on MacOS). Create a new PHP project named "wishlist". When you create a PHP project, it contains the index file index.php by default. For information on creating and configuring a PHP project, see Setting Up a PHP Project.

Defining a Page Flow Diagram

The scope of your application covers the following use cases:

The user views the wish list of a person.

The user registers as a new wisher.

The user logs in and creates her/his wish list.

The user logs in and edits his/her wish list.

To cover this basic functionality, you will need to implement the following PHP files:

The "front" page index.php for logging in, registering, and switching to wish lists of other users.

The wishlist.php page for viewing the wish list of a particular wisher.

The createNewWisher.php page for registering as a wisher.

The editWishList.php page for editing a wish list by its owner.

The editWish.php page for creating and editing wishes.

Now that you have finished the preliminary steps, you can start implementing the basic functionality of your application. Start with viewing the wish list of a wisher. This feature does not involve any validations and can be easily tested as you have already entered the test data into the database. The feature's functionality will be implemented on two pages, index.php and wishlist.php.

Adding a Form To index.php

The index.php file will not contain any PHP code so you can easily remove the following block:

The index.php file is used for two purposes:

Displaying a page with controls for entering data.

Transferring the entered data to another PHP file, where the data is processed. In this tutorial, the data is passed to a file named wishlist.php, which you create and code in the next section.

These actions are performed using an HTML form. Each HTML form contains:

A set of fields that correspond to the controls on the page.

The "action" that is performed after the user submits the data on the form. The action is represented by the path to the page that processes the data.

To add a form to index.php:

Switch to the Projects window, expand your project node and the Source Files node, and double click the index.php file. The index.php file opens in the main IDE editor area. The file contains a template for entering HTML and PHP code.

Note: You can ignore warnings from the HTML validator.

.

Remove the PHP block. The index.php file will not contain any PHP code.

Open the Palette from the Window menu or by pressing Ctrl-Shift-8.

From the Palette's HTML Forms section, drag and drop a Form into the <body> section of index.php.

The Insert Form dialog opens. In the Action field, type the path to the file to which the form will transfer data. In this case, type in wishlist.php. (You will create this file in the same location as index.php. See Creating wishlist.php and Testing the Application.) Select the GET method for transferring data. Give the form an arbitrary name, such as wishList. Click OK when you are done.

The file now looks like this:

Between the opening and closing tags of the form, type the text "Show wish list of: ".

Drag a Text Input component from the HTML Forms section of the Palette to the space after the text "Show wish list of:
".
The Insert Text
Input dialog opens.

Name the input user. Select input type text. Leave all other fields empty and click OK.

The file now looks like this:

Add a blank line above the </form> tag. Into this blank line, drag and drop a Button component from the HTML Forms section of the Palette.

The Insert Button dialog opens. Type Go into the Label field and click OK.

The form now looks like the code below, with one difference. In the code below, the
method attribute is explicit in the <form> tag. NetBeans IDE did not add a method attribute to your form because GET is the default value of this attribute.
However,
you might understand the code more easily if the method attribute is explicit.

The opening <form> tag contains the action attribute. The action attribute specifies the file to which the form transfers data. In this case, the file is named wishlist.php and it is in the same folder as index.php. (You will create this file in the section Creating wishlist.php and Testing the Application.)

The opening <form> tag also contains the method to be applied to transferring data (GET). PHP uses a $_GET or $_POST array for the values passed by this form depending on the value of the method attribute. In this case, PHP uses $_GET.

A text input component. This component is a text field for entering the name of the user whose wish list one wants to view. The starting value of the text field is an empty string. The name of this field is user. PHP uses the name of the field when creating an array for the values of the field. In this case, the array for the values of this field is htmlentities($_GET["user"]).

A submit input component with the value "Go". The "submit" type means that the input field appears on the page as a button. The value "Go" is the label of the button. When the user clicks the button, the data in the text component is transferred to the file specified in the action attribute.

Creating wishlist.php and Testing the Application

In Adding a Form To index.php you created a form in which the user submits the name of someone whose wish list the user wants to see. The name is passed to the page wishlist.php. However, this page does not exist. If you run index.php, you will get a 404: File Not Found error when you submit a name.
In this section, you create wishlist.php then test the application.

To create wishlist.php and test the application:

Inside the "wishlist" project you created, click the right mouse button on the Source files node and from the context menu choose New > PHP Web Page. The New PHP Web Page wizard opens.

Type wishlist in the File Name field and press Finish.

Click the right mouse button on the Sources node and choose Run Project from the context menu or click the Run Main Project icon on the toolbar if you have set your project as Main.

In the Show wish list of: edit box, enter Tom and click Go. An empty page with the following URL appears: http://localhost:90/Lesson2/wishlist.php?user=tom. This URL indicates that your main page works properly.

Establishing the Connection and Getting the Wisher ID

In this section, you first add code to wishlist.php that creates a connection to the database. You then add code to retrieve the ID number of the wisher whose name was typed into the index.php form.

Double click the wishlist.php file. The template that opens is different from index.php. Begin and end the file with <html></html> and <body></body> tags as the file will contain HTML code too.

The PHP code block displays the data that is received through the method GET in the field "user". This data is transferred from index.php where the name of the wish list owner Tom was entered in the text field "user". Repeat the steps from Testing index.php to see that wishlist.php works properly.

Delete the commented section in the template PHP block. In its place, type or paste in the following code. This code opens the connection to the database.

The code attempts to open a connection to the database and gives an error message if there is a failure.

Note for Oracle Database users: You may need to alter the database connection in the oci_connect command. The standard syntax is "hostname/service name". The connection to an Oracle XE database in this snippet is "localhost/XE" to follow that syntax.

Note: You can use NetBeans IDE's code completion for either mysqli or OCI8 functions.

Beneath the code to open the connection to the database, in the same PHP block, type or paste the following code. This code retrieves the ID of the wisher whose wish list was requested. If the wisher is not in the database, the code kills/exits the process and displays an error message.

The data is selected from the wishlist database through the $con connection. The selection criterion is the name received from the index.php as "user".

The syntax of a SELECT SQL statement can be briefly described as follows:

After SELECT, specify the fields from which you want to get data. An asterisk (*) stands for all fields.

After FROM clause, specify the name of the table from which the data must be retrieved.

The WHERE clause is optional. Specify the filter conditions in it.

The mysqli query returns a result object. OCI8 returns an executed statement. In either case, you fetch a row from the result of the executed query and extract the value of the ID row, storing it in the variable $wisherID.

Lastly, you free the mysqli result or OCI8 statement. You need to free all resources that use a connection before the connection will physically be closed. Otherwise PHP's internal refcounting system will keep the underlying DB connection open even if $con is not usable following a mysqli_close() or oci_close() call.

Security Note: For MySQL, the htmlentities($_GET["user"]) parameter is escaped in order to prevent SQL injection attacks. See Wikipedia on SQL injections and the mysql_real_escape_string documentation. Although in the context of this tutorial you are not at risk of harmful SQL injections, it is best practice to escape strings in MySQL queries that would be at risk of such an attack. OCI8 avoids this through bind variables.

This PHP block is now complete. If you are using a MySQL database, the wishlist.php file now looks like this:

If you test the application and enter an invalid user, the following message appears.

Displaying a Table of Wishes

In this section, you add code that displays an HTML table of the wishes associated with the wisher. The wisher is identified by the ID you retrieved in the code in the previous section.

Beneath the PHP block, type or paste the following HTML code block. This code opens a table, specifies the color of its borders (black), and "draws" the table header with the columns "Item" and "Due Date."

The SELECT query retrieves the wishes with their due dates for the specified wisher by his ID, which was retrieved in step 4, and stores the wishes and due dates in an array $result.

A loop displays the items of the $result array as rows in the table while the array is not empty.

The <tr></tr> tags form rows, the <td></td> tags form cells within rows, and \n starts a new line.

The htmlentities function converts all characters that have HTML entity equivalents into HTML entities. This helps to prevent cross-site scripting.

Functions at the end free all resources (mysqli results and OCI8 statements) and close the database connection. Note you need to free all resources that use a connection before the connection can physically be closed. Otherwise PHP's internal refcounting system keeps the underlying DB connection open even
if the connection is not usable following an oci_close() or mysqli_close() call.

Caution: Make sure you type the names of database fields exactly as they are specified during the database table creation. For Oracle, column names are returned as uppercase by default.

To test the application, run the project as described in the section Testing index.php.

Application Source Code after the Current Lesson Is Completed

MySQL users: Click here to download the source code that reflects the project state after the lesson is completed.

Oracle Database users: Click here to download the source code that reflects the project state after the lesson is completed.